Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Crossings fall after Title 42’s end

Venezuelan­s detained at border plunge by 98% over past week

- ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — A 98% drop in Venezuelan­s arriving at the U.S. southern border has helped lead to a steep decline in migrants crossing illegally from Mexico since pandemic-related asylum limits expired last week, U.S. officials said Wednesday.

The Border Patrol has stopped migrants an average of 4,400 times a day since Friday, when a public-health rule known as Title 42 ended. The average includes the less than 4,000 migrants each of the past two days, said Blas Nuñez-Neto, assistant homeland security secretary for border and immigratio­n policy. That’s down from a daily average of more than 10,000 in the four days leading to the end of Title 42.

“We continue to see encouragin­g signs that the measures we have put in place are working,” Nuñez-Neto told reporters, adding on a cautious note, “It is still too soon to draw any firm conclusion­s here about where these trends will go in the coming days and weeks.”

April figures released Wednesday further illustrate how Venezuelan­s drove much of the rush to the border in the waning days of Title 42. Authoritie­s stopped Venezuelan­s crossing illegally nearly 30,000 times during the month, up nine times from March.

The Biden administra­tion has been promoting a carrot and-stick strategy that couples new legal pathways to the U.S. with consequenc­es for those who don’t use them.

In the days leading up to the end of Title 42, the Border Patrol stopped 2,400 Venezuelan­s daily, followed by 1,900 Mexicans and 1,400 Colombians, Nuñez-Neto said. After Title 42, Mexicans replaced Venezuelan­s as the top nationalit­y at 1,000 a day, followed by 510 Colombians and 470 Guatemalan­s. The number of Venezuelan­s plummeted to 50.

There are “early promising signs” that migration through Panama’s notoriousl­y dangerous Darien Gap is falling, Nuñez-Neto said.

Migration from Venezuela also plunged in October after Mexico began taking back people from the South American country who were expelled from the U.S. under Title 42, which denied asylum on grounds of preventing the spread of covid-19. But Venezuelan­s began arriving again in large numbers just before Title 42 expired, walking for days through Panama.

The U.S. has sent back “thousands” of Venezuelan­s, Cubans and Nicaraguan­s to Mexico under a new policy, in effect since Friday, that denies asylum to anyone who travels through another country, like Mexico, to cross the U.S. border illegally, with few exceptions, Nuñez-Neto said.

The new legal pathways include allowing up to 30,000 Venezuelan­s, Cubans, Haitians and Nicaraguan­s to enter the U.S. monthly if they apply online with a financial sponsor and arrive by plane. Figures released Wednesday show all four nationalit­ies took advantage of the parole offer in April but, among the four, only Venezuelan­s also crossed the border illegally in historical­ly large numbers, second only to Mexicans.

The Border Patrol stopped migrants of all nationalit­ies 182,114 times in April, up 12% from March but down 11% from the same period last year.

The U.S. has also been admitting 1,000 people a day at land crossings with Mexico if they apply in northern Mexico on a mobile app called CBPOne. Nuñez-Neto said the number allowed on the mobile app will increase soon, but did not say when or by how much.

The Border Patrol had more than 28,000 people in custody last week, doubling in two weeks and prompting the agency to release thousands without notices to appear in immigratio­n court. They were instead given notices to report to an immigratio­n office within 60 days, drasticall­y cutting down on processing time and allowing agents to open space in holding facilities.

 ?? (AP/Fernando Llano) ?? Venezuelan migrants rest inside their tents Sunday on the bank of the Rio Grande in Matamoros,
Mexico.
(AP/Fernando Llano) Venezuelan migrants rest inside their tents Sunday on the bank of the Rio Grande in Matamoros, Mexico.

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